The movie\'s characters have become cultural icons in Japan. Mr. Miyazaki\'s film truely captures the imagination of kids and the young at heart. So, read on to join in the adventure with Mei and Satsuki.',
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Totoro is one of Hayao Miyazaki's better known films in North America. It was
picked by Roger Ebert as one of the "five best movies for kids." This success
is tempered by the fact its existence barely registers with mainstream movie watchers in
North America.

Totoro is nostalgic story set in the 1950s. The movie starts with the main characters, Mei and Satsuki,
moving into the countryside around Tokyo together with their father. Mei and
Satsuki's father works in Tokyo as a archaeology professor. The reason for this move
is simple: Their mother is
suffering from tuberculosis and receiving treatment at the nearby Shichikokuyama hospital.

Exactly how Totoro can be that round and still be dexterous is a mystery.

Credit: Studio Ghibli

The pair is quick to explore their excusitely crafted surroundings. In watching the
movie you are drawn into the world as seen by the childern. Mei, the younger
sister is the first to discover the forest spirit Totoro living in the towering camphor
near their new house. Satsuki later learns Mei wasn't kidding about Totoro in the
infamous bus stop scene.
A setback in their mother's recovery sets off a sequence of events were
Mei becomes lost trying to reach her mother by herself and only Totoro can help Satsuki
find her.

Tokorozawa City, the setting of the film, is shown in the movie as a lush forested farmland.
Today, it is a suburb of Tokyo and is where the director, Hayao Miyazaki, lives. Miyazaki's
mother was also sick with tuberculosis in his own childhood which makes this film (minus
the two girls and Totoro)
somewhat autobiographical.

Many portions of the film are steeped in Shintoism. Totoro (a made up creature)
that Mei and later Satsuki meet is a Shinto forest spirit. Totoro and the other
forest spirits in the movie can only be seen by children. He is more or less an oversized
japanese raccoon or tanuki with owl-like features. The cat bus is just
plain weird.

Totoro's tree has a
Shimenawa to signify the
tree the tree as sacred and prevent unpure things from approaching. 'Shime' means
taboo in Japanese. The family shows their respect after Mei discovers Totoro
by bowing and thanking the forest spirit for looking after Mei.

Japan's other major religion, Buddhism, plays a role as well.
The Ojizou-sama statue that Mei and Satsuki stop at in the rain
are part of Japanese Buddhism and are usually made as a memorial to a child who
dies. They are placed alongside roads to wish for the safety of travellers.
When Mei is lost later in the film she sits next to a row of these statues.
This is a symbolic way of saying that she is being watched over and is safe. At the same time,
the cat bus is barrelling down the high-voltage transmission wires towards her reinforcing
this.

Note: The mixing of Shintoism and Buddhism in is quite common
in Japan. A funeral, for instance, is generally a buddhist ceremony regardless of whether
the person was a Buddhist. Shintoism views
death as a contamination and untouchable. The two religions have come to complement
each other nicely in Japan.

While Totoro
didn't break even in 1988 with its theatrical release it has become a well
cherished film in Japan. Its setting and theme struck a cord with many people in
Japan as it shows the simpler rural life
they once lived. This contrasts sharply against the modern and complicated life many Japanese people live. The lush undisturbed setting is very nostalgic. Concrete barriers to protect people from landslide littered against the landscape in today's Japan.

So from the imagination of the master animator's pen came a powerful statement about what was lost in the modernization of Japan. Many of
Miyazaki's other films like Princesses Mononoke
and Nausicaa also have environmentalist and naturalist
themes.

To many the film has become a symbol of "what once was". A group in Tokorozawa
called the "Totoro no Furusato (Totoro's Home) National Trust Movement"
uses Totoro as their mascot for their work preserving what is left of the local
rural setting. Miyazaki has donated a considerable amount in money and art to the cause.

While this film has been somewhat successful in North America it highlights for me
some of the problems Japanese films have breaking into this market. Without the cultural
background that is assumed for a Japanese audience much of the meaning of a film
can be lost. One can't blame the audience for this problem. In my opinion,
importers of Japanese movies could do a much better job of educating the audience of
the background they're missing.

I'd like give a special thanks to nausicaa.net where I got most of the above facts.

Ghibli Commentary

Set during Showa 30 (1955) and in a Tokyo suburb, Totoro is a fantasy tale of the heart-warming meeting of wondrous monsters and big city children. At first, something in the order of a 2 part 40 minute film was planned but while working on the project, one after another, ideas collected and in the end it became a single over 80 minute long movie. But, at first, it was to be a movie which told a tale using animation where in the plot nothing in particular happens. In other words, outside of an adventure nothing was to occur.

...

Totoro gathered a high level of support from its audience and Kinemajunpo's readers choose to award it the prize of best new Japanese film for 1988.